Sunday, June 8, 2014

ClickHEREfor Psy's "Hangover" Lyrics (with English Translation of the Parts in Korean).

Psy's success of Gangnam Style (GS) is his arch enemy. Even though he said his GS success was an accident (link), I bet he thinks he knows the recipe for success. Unfortunately, however, he was mistaken if my guess was right. I think he hit the jackpot because he didn't expect it and didn't long for it. He just wanted to have fun and then voila! -- it just happened.

Let's look back on his "Gentleman" released last year. I believe the song was not well-received in the US and not as successful as GS because of its over-the-top music video. For I really liked the beat of the song which sure is catchy. Yet, none of my local radio stations has ever played the song - not even once - when they have played the Chainsmokers' "#Selfie" (which I think no doubt copied Gentleman) more than enough.

Honestly, I really like Psy's new song and I liked "Gentleman" as well. However, if he really wants to be taken seriously, he'll have to stop trying too hard with his music videos, which have overshadowed the quality of his music.

Friday, May 2, 2014

The following letter was written by the Korean figure
skating fans and the Golden Yuna Face Book group members worldwide, in hopes
that the “Sochi judging scandal” will be resolved as soon as possible and that
the rest of the world will empathize with them.
With the opening of a website for the figure skating fans worldwide (www.sochiscandal.com), united to seek resolution to the “Sochi judging
scandal,” they will participate more actively in this movement.

As you may
already know, on April 10, 2014, the Korean Skating Union (KSU) at last filed
the official complaint with the International Skating Union (ISU) over the
judging of the ladies’ figure skating competitions at the Sochi Olympics. Alexander Gorshkov, the president of the
Russian Figure Skating Federation, reportedly said in his interview with Sovsport
that he didn't see any violation in the makeup of the judging panel for the
women’s figure skating event in Sochi. (http://www.sovsport.ru/sochi/texts/text-item/703846). Contrary to what
Mr. Gorshkov said in the interview, a common sentiment among Korean figure
skating fans is that the complaint filed by the KSU is quite belated and the KSU
did what they should have done earlier.
Fans are, in fact, expressing strong doubts over the facts that (i) the
KSU didn’t “protest” right away after the ladies’ figure skating event ended at the 2014 Sochi
Olympics and (ii) the KSU waited until the last minute to “complain” even after
they had announced their plan, on March 21, 2014, to do so.

As we all know, something happened in
Sochi that can be considered cheating and an offense against the spirit of
sportsmanship and against common sense. For
the past few years, figure skating fans have witnessed the bizarre and odd
cases in which (i) the skaters from the host countries have often received
unreasonably high scores, (ii) the judges have gifted many of the skaters with
undeservedly high scores in the Olympic Games, and (iii) some specific skaters
from major figure skating powers have received favoritism from the judges.

Nevertheless, we have
overlooked such phenomena as the results and standings were not too off the
charts to be considered erratic or abnormal.
Sochi judging in the ladies’ figure
skating event, however, crossed the line in the sand we the figure skating fans
had drawn. We can’t agree with the Sochi technical
panel officials on their calls on some specific skaters and also with the Sochi
judging panel officials on their GOE marks for some specific skaters. We don’t agree that some specific skaters were fairly judged in terms of the
finesse/perfectness of execution, speed, precision (the precise control of
edges), upper body movement, step sequences (turns and steps) and levels of difficulty, overall skating skills,
choreography, program component, etc.

Most of the long-time figure skating fans
could never agree with the Sochi results and that’s why it’s being called the“Sochi
scandal”. There’s one reason that explains this: “Unfair judging.” Some analysts
insist Adelina Sotnikova earned the gold medal by doing 7 triple jumps, one
triple jump more than Yuna Kim; her FS was more difficult than Kim’s as its
total base value was higher. Such
explanations, however, have overlooked the fact that Kim’s
base value for the jump elements in her short program (SP) was in fact 1.90 points “higher” than Sotnikova’s and her total base value for the jump
elements was just 1.44 points lower than
Sotnikova’s. Why have they never applied the same logic to
Kim’s SP and questioned its outcome? How
come Kim was ahead of Sotnikova by only a margin of 0.28 points when her base
value for the jump elements was 1.90 points higher? The defenders of Sotnikova’s gold medal must
account for this contradiction between the SP outcome and the FS outcome. And as
you all know, a base value doesn’t necessarily mean the actual score. No matter how well the program is composed of
more elements with higher base scores, it’s meaningless if the elements are not
executed as planned. In order to earn
the actual score, a skater must perform the planned elements and get them
ratified. If she fails, she will receive
less points than her proposed base values.

According to the statistical
analysis by Professor
Tiziano Virgili, an Italian physicist, “The
statistical analysis of the Sochi Ladies Figure Skating results has shown the
presence of systematic bias in the scores, in both Technical Elements and Program
Components. The largest bias was
assigned in both cases to the first skater (Adelina Sotnikova), and this
probably explains the “uproar” which has followed the end of the competition.”
(Please refer to his analysis for more
details. It’s a must-read.)

Yet, the KSU
chose to file a complaint over the makeup of the judging panel for the ladies’
figure skating event in Sochi only. The complaint is based on ISU regulations
that state that a person who may reasonably appear to be in a conflict of
interest position regarding a competing skater, ineligible person or
remunerated coach is not permitted to serve as an official of the competition
in which such skater is entered (Rule 121 of the ISU Constitution and General
Regulations). In Sochi, however, (i)
such officials apparently in a conflict of interest position were approved to
serve on the technical and judging panels and (ii) those officials showed
obvious favoritism towards two specific skaters, which was suspicious enough to
be considered “fixing.”

We know that
“protests concerning the composition of the panel of officials must be filed
within one hour of its announcement” (Rule 123 (3b) of the ISU Constitution and
General Regulations). Who, however,
could have thought that they would do what they really did in Sochi? That said, we strongly believe we
need to primarily call the ISU to account for approving such individuals
apparently in a conflict of interest position for the technical and judging
panels, before blaming Korea for delayed
response to the Sochi judging.

In an exclusive phone interview with Chicago Tribune’s Philip Hersh (2/21/2014), Ottavio Cinquanta
said, “Would you rather have an idiot acting as a judge than a good one who is
a relative of the manager of a federation?
It is far more important to have a good judge than a possible conflict
of interest." In other words,
Cinquanta praised ISU officials like Alla Shekhovtseva, Alexander Lakernik, and
Olga Baranova, who have conflicts of interest regarding competing skaters
(Adelina Sotnikova and Julia Lipnitskaya), as well as Yuri Balkov who was
suspended for foul play, for being good judges.
At the same time, he disparaged another ISU official as “an idiot acting
as a judge” and made statements which completely disregarded the ISU rules and
regulations themselves. Such
statements are practically the same as acknowledging that he approved and/or
assigned such individuals in a conflict of interest position regarding two
competing skaters for the Sochi technical and judging panel.In fact, a majority of
Sochi officials were selected
against the ISU General Regulation Rule 121 and Code of Ethics Article (h) and
(i), violating the Conflict of Interest Statues.

Let’s first look
at the ISU Rule 121(j) of the ISU Constitution and General Regulations:

j) Personal, Commercial and Family Relationships

i) The ISU Code of
Ethics, including but not limited to its conflict of interest” provisions, is
applicable to appointed ISU Officials and other participants as stated in ISU
Code of Ethics;

ii) Without
detracting from the broad and personal applicability of the Code of Ethics, the
following examples are presented for guidance:

1. At an ISU Event
or the Olympic Winter Games or the Winter Youth Olympic Games Office Holders,
elected or appointed, shall not act as members of any national team,

or act as team leaders, assistant team leaders,
chaperons, team doctors or team coaches, or wear national team uniforms (except
Coaches serving on an ISU Technical Committee, may coach individually their
students who are entered in an ISU Event or an international competition).

2. For the Figure
Skating Branch only, ISU Officials (Referees, Judges, Technical Controllers,
Technical Specialists, etc.), when at an ISU Event or the Olympic Winter Games
or the Winter Youth Olympic Games where they are not serving as an ISU Official,
may act as a member of a national team, team leader, assistant team leader,
chaperon, team doctor or team coach, and may wear national team uniforms.

3. At an ISU Event
or the Olympic Winter Games or the Winter Youth Olympic Games, a person of the
family of a competing Skater is not permitted to serve as an Official of the
competition in which such Skater is entered, but such person may serve at other
competitions of such ISU Event or the Olympic Winter Games or the Winter Youth
Olympic Games unless such service may reasonably appear to be a conflict of
interest.

4. At an ISU Event
or the Olympic Winter Games or the Winter Youth Olympic Games, a person of the
family of an ineligible person, or of the family of a remunerated Coach, is not
permitted to serve as an Official of the competition in which a competing pupil
of the ineligible person or remunerated Coach is entered, but such person may
serve at other competitions of such ISU Event or the Olympic Winter Games or
the Winter Youth Olympic Games unless such service may reasonably appear to be
a conflict of interest.

5. The term ”family”
as used in this Rule shall be understood as including all persons who, due to
their relationships, may reasonably appear to be in a conflict of interest
position regarding a competing Skater, ineligible person or remunerated Coach.

6. For purposes of
staffing at an event, the Referee(s) shall decide any issues raised at the
event concerning conflicts of interest or other matters involving the
applicability of the ISU Code of Ethics to assigned ISU Officials.

According to the
rule 121(j) above, a person who may reasonably appear to be in a conflict of
interest position regarding a competing skater is not permitted to serve as an
official of any ISU competition.

(1)
In
Sochi, however, one of the nine members of the judging panelwas Alla Shekhovtseva, who is the wife of Valentin Piseev, the
president and general director of the Russian Skating Federation, and who
hugged Adelina Sotnikova, a compatriot she had just judged, just minutes after
the Sochi ladies’ figure skating event ended.
Surprisingly, she was “randomly” selected to serve on the judging panel
for “five” consecutive ISU competitions held in 2013 in all of which Sotnikova
competed. Professor Virgili’s statistical answer to
these obviously abnormal drawing results are as follows. (Refer to Virgili’s email correspondence.)

According to the ISU rules, the Organizing
Committee should select one (and not more than one) judge for each country,
from the official lists. So what matter here is the number N of Russian Judges
who are in the list.

For a random draw, for each competition the
probability to select a special Judge is just the ratio 1/N, in our case 1/10
(considering the 10 ISU Judges). For
more competitions, the probability to extract always the same Judge is the
product of the probabilities (independent draws). For 5/5 competitions this
probability is 1/100000. (1/10 x 1/10 x 1/10 x 1/10 x
1/10 =1/100000) Clearly the fact that the same Judge was always
present in 5/5 competitions is not compatible with a random draw.

In other words,
the fact that Alla Shekhovtseva was selected to serve on the judging panel for
“five” consecutive ISU competitions held in 2013 in all of which Sotnikova
competed is not compatible with a random draw.

In addition, Yuri
Balkov of Ukraine was also one of the nine members of the judging panel. At the
1998 Winter Games in Nagano, Japan, Balkov was taped by the Canadian judge Jean
Senft explaining what order the competitors would finish in the ice-dancing
competition before it took place. He
was suspended for one year.

(2)
The three members of the technical
panel have much greater effect on the scores
than the nine members of the judging panel have as they are the ones who
determine if such violations as under-rotation on takeoff, under-rotation on
landing, or wrong-edge on takeoff have occurred and accordingly apply
under-rated , downgraded, or wrong-edge takeoff jump deductions. In effect, this means they can always fix the
competition if they want to, need to, or have to. In Sochi, Alexander Lakernik of Russia was the
technical controller, head of the three-member technical panel. He has served as the vice president of the
Russian figure skating federation. Olga
Baranova, the assistant technical specialist, is a naturalized Finland citizen,
born in Russia, and was under the tutelage of Viktor Kudriavtsev, a Russian
figure skating coach and choreographer who works with many members of the
Russian figure skating team as a consultant.

–supervises the Technical Specialists and Data
Operator and proposes corrections, if necessary, respecting any performed
element and Level of Difficulty identified by the serving Technical Specialist
and Assistant Technical Specialist. However, if both Technical Specialists
disagree with a correction asked for by the Technical Controller, the initial
decision of the Technical Specialist and Assistant Technical Specialist stands.
In the case a disagreement about an element and/or Level of Difficulty exists between
the Technical Specialist and Assistant Technical Specialist, the decision of
the Technical Controller prevails; The
Technical Controller is responsible to verify that the performed elements and
Levels of Difficulty identified in accordance with the above-mentioned
procedure are correctly introduced into the system by the Data Operator and the
performed elements and Levels of Difficulty may be validated only upon formal
confirmation by the Technical Controller that such verification has been completed;

–authorizes or corrects the identification of
Illegal Elements/Movements;

–authorizes or corrects the identification of a
fall, which occurred in any part of the program, including introductory and
concluding steps/movements in Pattern Dance (does not apply to Pattern Dance
Elements). However if both Technical Specialists disagree with a correction on
Illegal Elements/Movements or falls asked for by the Technical Controller, the
initial decision of the Technical Specialist and Assistant Technical Specialist
stands;

–moderates the Round Table Discussion together
with the Referee according to ISU guidelines (see Rule 432);

–prepares the Report on the event according to
ISU guidelines (see Rule 433);

–participates in the victory ceremony

4.Duties of the Technical Specialist/Assistant
Technical Specialist

The Technical Specialist

–identifies and calls the performed elements;

–identifies and calls correct Levels of
Difficulty of the performed elements;

–identifies Illegal Elements/Movements;

–identifies a fall, which occurred in any part of
the program, including introductory and concluding steps/movements in Pattern
Dance;

–identifies and deletes additional elements.

The Assistant Technical Specialist is also part of the decision making process as
outlined under the duties of the Technical Controller.

5. Duties of the Data & Replay Operator

The Data Operator

–inputs the called elements;

–inputs the Levels of Difficulty of the elements
as called;

–corrects elements or Levels of Difficulty as
instructed by the Technical Controller;

–indicates additional elements identified by the
computer to the Technical Specialists and to the Technical Controller.

The Replay Operator

–records each element separately to enable the
Technical Panel, the Referee and the Judges to review the element when
necessary

The Data & Replay Operators

–support the Technical Specialists and the
Technical Controller;

–attend the meeting of the Technical Specialists
before each portion/segment of the discipline

In short, in
every ISU competition, the technical panel determines if such violations as
under-rotation on takeoff, under-rotation on landing, or wrong-edge on takeoff
have occurred and accordingly applies underrated, downgraded, or wrong-edge
takeoff jump deductions. The technical controller has the duty and power to
make a decision in case a disagreement about an element and/or level of
difficulty exists between the technical specialist and the assistant technical
specialist. In other words, it's not too
much to say that it’s the technical controller who determines if all the
planned elements are accurately and properly executed and determines the levels
of difficulty for the different elements executed. At the 2014 Sochi Olympics, Russia’s
Alexander Lakernik served this crucial/critical role of a technical
controller. (This explains why
Sotnikova’s flutz was fully ratified and her juniorish steps and spins earned
the maximum Level 4's. It's in fact really surprising that she was
the only skater in this event who received Level 4's on step sequences and
spins both in SP and free skate (FS).)

At the 2014 World
Championships recently held in Japan, Cinquanta said, according to Reuters, “We
are not perfect, as also the skaters are not perfect. Sometimes, they (judges) do a mistake.
Mistakes are possible, because we are human beings.” (Link) Yes, we all think Cinquanta is right on the
money and that’s why an instantaneous slow-motion video replay system is
operated by a replay operator to ensure the accuracy of judging because we all
know with more accurate calls come more legitimate outcomes in competitions. In
Sochi, Russia’s Alexander Kuznetsov served the role of a replay operator. Kuznetsov was one of the Russian officials
who expressed frustration the 2002 Salt Lake pairs’ results.

Again, the ISU
officials can make mistakes because they are human beings. To prevent possible mistakes or errors from
happening, therefore, they are systematically supported and assisted by a
data/replay operator as well as a referee who’s responsible for running the
competition. That being the case, was
it just a human mistake or a dereliction of duty that Switzerland’s Diana
Barbacci Levy, the Sochi referee, failed to run the competition flawlessly by
failing to order the technical controller, the technical specialist, and the
assistant technical specialist to be assisted and supported by the data/replay
operator?

If Cinquanta’s statement at the 2014
Worlds had aimed at the “Sochi scandal,” such perspectives should be seriously
questioned. How can he ever explain the
fact that the ISU officials showed the greatest systematic favoritism towards
only two skaters from the host country despite their obvious mistakes? It's common sense that there's always home
ice advantage and we’re not trying to deny it.
Yet, the Sochi judging clearly crossed the line and went too far.

(3) According to Rule
401 and 402 of the ISU Special Regulations and Technical Rules, the members of
the technical panel for the single & pair skating as well as ice dance
events of the Olympic Winter Games, and any Qualifying Competition for the
Olympic Winter Games shall be appointed by the ISU and the members of the
judging panel shall be drawn from the ISU member countries which have skaters
qualified for the Olympic Winter Games according to the results of the World
Championships of the preceding year in the discipline concerned. All drawn 13 judges for each discipline will
be on site at the Olympic Winter Games location where all consequent draws to
complete panel of 9 Judges for each segment of the respective discipline will
be conducted by the referee.

Prior to the 2014
Sochi Winter Olympics, 13 judges for the ladies’ event had been already drawn
from the 20 ISU member countries which have skaters qualified for the Games
according to the results of the 2013 World Championships (13/20). At the Olympics, the “random” selection of
the 9 judges for the ladies’ SP was conducted by the referee, Diana Barbacci
Levy of Switzerland. Then 4 judges from
the United States, Great Britain, Sweden and South Korea who judged the SP was
“randomly” excluded and the 9 judges for the ladies’ FS included judges from
four former Soviet bloc nations (Russia, Ukraine, Estonia and Slovakia) as well
as France. Consequently, the 7/9 of the
judging panel was all from Europe. The rest two were respectively from Canada
and Japan, which is not particularly Korean-friendly. Some may think it was coincidental while
others may think otherwise.

For your
information, please watch this video (with English subtitles) in which Korean
Olympic speed skaters, silver medalists in Team Pursuit at the 2014 Winter
Olympics, reveal what happened at the tournament
draws done for quarter finals in Sochi.
If what these Korean speed skaters said on the show is not an
exaggeration but a truth, and if the same or similar thing had happened during
the selection/exclusion of the judges for the ladies’ SP and FS, how much was the referee, Diana
Barbacci Levy of Switzerland, responsible for that? Was it just a human mistake, a dereliction of
duty, or something else?

(4)
According to Article 22 of the ISU
Constitution and General Regulations, an Officials’ Assessment Commission (OAC)
shall evaluate

1) evident anomalies in the Judges scores
identified based on a predetermined criteria, including mathematical criteria,
confirmed by the Council, and

2) decisions taken by the Technical Panel.

Therefore, we
strongly believe that the OAC must re-evaluate the judging procedure/process,
content, and results of the
ladies’ SP and FS in Sochi. We also believe that if it’s the
long-established habits or traditions of the ISU collectively that they follow
the rules beneficial only to a select few, disregarding other rules, then such
bad habits or traditions must be repealed or replaced with good ones.

(5) Now, there is one
last thing about those troubling and incomprehensible acts done by the International
Olympic Committee (IOC). They fabricated
the quotes from Yuna Kim as if she was admitting Sotnikova deservedly had won
gold over her and humbly accepting her defeat.
Then the quotes were confirmed to be a total blunder. The IOC stealthily removed them off its
official site when, as a matter of fact, they owe more than just a formal
correction or an official explanation.

Then they put up a
video of highlights from the Sochi ladies' SP on their official Youtube channel
in which a commentator identifies Kim’s second jump in her signature triple
lutz-triple toe loop jump combination as a “double” toe loop. Ever since, there have been many correction requests from figure skating fans
but the IOC wouldn’t budge an inch.

Please don’t
forget the French newspaperL’Equipe report on the U.S.-Russia
conspiracy to fix figure skating competitions at the 2014 Olympics
(2/9/2014). The report was based on an
anonymous source – a Russian coach – and mentioned that the U.S. would help
Russia win gold in the pairs and team competition and Russia would help U.S.
win gold in ice dancing. Of course, the
U.S. Figure Skating Association immediately denied the report.

Korean figure
skating fans are sincerely asking ISU to thoroughly examine (i) the selection
procedures of the controversial technical/judging panels for the ladies’ figure
skating event (SP and FS) at the 2014 Sochi Olympics and (ii) its questionable
outcome (SP and FS) which is fishy enough for many fans and insiders around the
world to suspect “fixing” and to make a reasonable assessment and decision over
the case that anyone can accept without a doubt. In fact, the anonymous judging installed by the ISU after the 2002 Salt Lake
Olympics can never provide ways to evaluate the controversial cases in which an
anonymous judge or anonymous judges gave a specific skater exceptionally high
scores “out of the blue.” Furthermore, Rule 123 (4Ai) of the
ISU Constitution and General Regulations stipulates, “No protests against
evaluations by referees, judges and the technical panel of the skaters’
performances are allowed.” As Yuna Kim was
an unquestionable victim of such loopholes in the current ISU judging system,
we urge the ISU to take steps/actions immediately to redress the colossal injustice done to her. We believe that it’s the one and
only true way for the current ISU judging system to get back on the right path
and correct its deviation.

We understand that it’s natural to think that Korean fans are
furious with Sochi judges over Yuna Kim’s silver medal
because she’s Korean. Of course, it’s true; it’s something we
can’t deny. We hope that Yuna
Kim will also be awarded her very deserved gold medal in the end. At the same time, however, our love for Kim is
one thing, but our pursuit of sports justice is another. We are protesting against the Sochi judging
and its results and asking for the correction of the “mistakes” made in Sochi,
driven by the same motivation and reasons as other figure skating fans around
the world. We hope that
figure skating won’t eventually be monopolized by a select few after getting
the cold shoulder from its fans and that the sport will maintain its beauty of perfect balance
between technical excellence and artistic elegance and splendor. We hope that the Olympic Games, a global
sports festival, will restore its tarnished honor and the spirit of true
sportsmanship so visibly damaged by the “Sochi scandal.” We hope that the Olympic and sport movement
(i.e., the IOC and the ISU) won’t turn their back on “justice,” one of the
long-cherished ideals of mankind and that they will turn over a new leaf to
epitomize humanity.

We want both the
ISU and the IOC to show the true meaning of Olympic spirit, especially fair
judging in this case, while handling the complaint filed by the KSU. We hope to see fair judging in every
individual competition so that athletes are rewarded for their years of hard
work and, of course, for their excellence. We hope athletes are treated and judged
equally and fairly regardless of their nationality, ethnicity, gender, race, or
any other characteristic.

If the IOC and
the ISU sweep this scandal under the rug, then no one will dare to say sport is
“fair” but we are afraid that they will.
Therefore, we strongly ask them to correct the scandalous Sochi judging
and its results so that we can remain loyal to sports as well as figure
skating.